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Pathogenic neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) RNA splicing resolved by targeted RNAseq.

Roelof KosterRita D BrandãoD TserpelisC E P van RoozendaalC N van OosterhoudKathleen B M ClaesAimée D C PaulussenM SinnemaM VreeburgV van der SchootC T R M StumpelM P G BroenL SpruijtM C J JongmansS A J Lesnik ObersteinAstrid S PlompM Misra-IsrieF A DuijkersM J LouwersR SzklarczykK W J DerksH G BrunnerA van den WijngaardM van GeelMarinus J Blok
Published in: NPJ genomic medicine (2021)
Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is caused by loss-of-function variants in the NF1 gene. Approximately 10% of these variants affect RNA splicing and are either missed by conventional DNA diagnostics or are misinterpreted by in silico splicing predictions. Therefore, a targeted RNAseq-based approach was designed to detect pathogenic RNA splicing and associated pathogenic DNA variants. For this method RNA was extracted from lymphocytes, followed by targeted RNAseq. Next, an in-house developed tool (QURNAs) was used to calculate the enrichment score (ERS) for each splicing event. This method was thoroughly tested using two different patient cohorts with known pathogenic splice-variants in NF1. In both cohorts all 56 normal reference transcript exon splice junctions, 24 previously described and 45 novel non-reference splicing events were detected. Additionally, all expected pathogenic splice-variants were detected. Eleven patients with NF1 symptoms were subsequently tested, three of which have a known NF1 DNA variant with a putative effect on RNA splicing. This effect could be confirmed for all 3. The other eight patients were previously without any molecular confirmation of their NF1-diagnosis. A deep-intronic pathogenic splice variant could now be identified for two of them (25%). These results suggest that targeted RNAseq can be successfully used to detect pathogenic RNA splicing variants in NF1.
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